Case Number 09223

ODYSSEY 5: THE COMPLETE SERIES

The Charge

"We saw the Earth destroyed, and in a heartbeat, everything and everyone
we knew was gone."

Opening Statement

Writer Manny Coto made a name for himself by writing several fan favorite
episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise, and has since joined the 24
writing staff. Before that, though, Coto shone in his own highly praised yet
short-lived Showtime series, Odyssey 5. Now all 19 time-twisting episodes
are on DVD in a five-disc box set. But is this adventure worth reliving?

But, while in orbit, the crew is stunned to see the Earth destroyed in an
instant, imploding into a giant gaseous cloud. With their air running out, the
crew members ready themselves for their own deaths. Instead, they're rescued by
a mysterious being called the Seeker (John Neville, The Adventures of Baron
Munchausen). He's seen this phenomenon on countless other worlds but is too
late to stop it on Earth. Instead, he's able to send the five survivors back in
time five years. Their bodies cannot go back in time, so instead the Seeker
sends their consciousness back, into their bodies of five years ago. Waking up
back on Earth with knowledge of what's going to happen in the next few years,
the crew reunites with a new mission: find out what destroyed the Earth, and
stop it.

The Evidence

In most time travel stories, there's usually a bunch of business about how if
you go back in time, you can't change anything or you'll alter the future.
Odyssey 5 throws that out right from the start. In this case, the outcome
is the destruction of all humanity, so messing with the future is fair game.
Along with their global concerns, the characters also see opportunities to redo
five years of their own lives. They attempt to correct past mistakes, sometimes
successfully and sometimes with unexpected results.

If the time travel aspects of the series aren't enough to wrap your heads
around, try the sinister conspiracy angle, which our heroes believe will
eventually end the world. In their adventures, the Odyssey crew comes across two
enemies. First are the synthetics, which look and act like ordinary humans but
are really made of slimy artificial goop that looks like week-old chowder. Then
there are the sentients, life forms that somehow exist only on the Internet.
Invisible, they're watching our every move, they know almost everything about
us, and they're able to cause all kinds of trouble. Conveniently for our heroes,
all this action takes place close to home, with hints that a secret group inside
NASA also has a role to play. The five time travelers of the Odyssey have to
confront these enemies armed only with their combined wits and a little
luck.

On that note, let's take a closer look at the main cast:

Peter Weller as Chuck Taggert Peter Weller doesn't just act
cool in this series, he is cool. He's nothing but tough-guy Texas swagger
combined with old-fashioned American do-goodism. Putting him in a NASA jacket
and giving him a cigar only completes the package. While the other characters
theorize about the nature of their enemies and what might happen in the future,
Taggert is the one who makes the decisions and jumps into the action. Without
him to call the shots, the Odyssey team might have no direction. At home,
Taggert attempts to be honest with his wife, telling her from the start that
he's traveled back in time. He's also reunited with his older son, who, in the
original timeline, left home after a disagreement. Like the other characters in
Odyssey 5, he has two struggles, one against otherworldly enemies, and
one in his personal life. But, mostly, he's who we look to when it comes to
saving the world. When he slams his fist down on a table and says, "The
next five years will go by like that!" we believe him.

Leslie Silva as Sarah Forbes Described by Coto as the heart of
the series, Silva has a lot of ground to cover in her character's arc. When
Sarah goes back in time, her young son has not yet died of cancer, so she sets
out to find some way to prevent that. But, also, she's back in her first
marriage, the one that ended badly. When she crosses paths with her second
husband-to-be, the man she truly loves, her confusion is understandable. With so
much going on in her personal life, it's impressive that she still makes time to
battle evil synthetics.

Christopher Gorham as Neil Taggert Gorham has one of the more
fun roles here, and much of the series' humor comes from his situation. He has
the mind of a highly trained 22-year-old astronaut in the body of a rebellious
17-year-old pothead. Yes, it is a conceit that someone could make it into space
at age 22 (this is later explained away by making Neil a borderline prodigy),
but it still makes for some amusing situations as he has to relive his high
school days, complete with tests, parties, and a cute girlfriend who can't
understand why he's acting so differently.

Sebastian Roché as Kurt Mandel Hoo, boy. Where do I begin
with this guy? At first, Kurt is comic relief, spewing a nonstop stream of randy
sex jokes, attempting to hook up with anything even remotely female. He never
really loses this aspect of his personality, but more and more layers of the
character are revealed as the series progresses. In one key scene in the first
episode, he discovers just how easy it is to alter the future when he places a
bet on a football game he knows the outcome of. Placing that one bet caused just
enough of a ripple effect that that the game ends differently. This one act
convinces Kurt and the others that it is possible to change the future for the
better. Later on, his character shows something of a dark side by secretly
hoarding synthetic technology, and in one episode he almost uncharacteristically
joins a fanatical cult with ties to a sentient. In between acts such as these,
it's back to more sarcastic wisecracks and constant sex. Kurt is a character
that will likely divide viewers. Some will find his various antics amusing,
while others will probably want to slap some sense into him.

Tamara Craig Thomas as Amanda Perry I get the sense that the
creators didn't have as much of a plan for Amanda as they did for the other
characters. Her main subplot is her relationship with her father, a politician
running for reelection. Then, a few episodes in, it's revealed that she and Kurt
once had a relationship. She's missing from a few other episodes, casually
explained away as being either in training or on a mission to an international
space station. Although she does have some nice little moments here and there,
she's the one member of the ensemble who never really gets a chance to
shine.

As you can surmise from the above, the real strengths of Odyssey 5
are the characters and their personal conflicts. The other half of the series is
the science fiction part, with the sentients, synthetics, and other fantastical
elements. Many of the ideas present are intriguing ones -- such as numeric code
developing into intelligent life, and computers created not out of plastic and
wires but out of biological tissue -- but the execution of these ideas sometimes
falls flat. Sure, there are chases, gunfights, and explosions aplenty, but the
action/suspense scenes aren't nearly as intense as they could be, and therefore
they're not at the same level as the dramatic scenes. Sci-fi fans will want to
enjoy this one for the interesting plot and characters, and not for the
action.

The picture and sound quality here are top-notch. Colors are bright and
vivid, and dark scenes have deep, rich black levels. There aren't a lot of
show-off sound effects or music in this one, but the audio is immersive enough,
with no immediate flaws. The actors do tend to shoot though the exposition
awfully quickly, so English subtitles would have been a definite help, but there
aren't any. As for extras, Coto and Weller sit down for an informative
commentary on the first episode. Although it starts out somewhat
self-congratulatory, the commentary eventually covers such ground as where the
series would have gone if it had continued, and some of the fun antics that went
on behind the scenes.

The Rebuttal Witnesses

Odyssey 5 isn't just a TV series, it's a cancelled TV series. So, if
you're going into this one expecting everything to come to a conclusion, you'll
walk away very disappointed. Coto says in the commentary that he plans to bring
back the series and finish it in the future, but for now, the fates of Taggert
and company are lost to an unresolved cliffhanger. There's enough good in the
series that it can be enjoyed even without a big ending, but it's still a
letdown to have no resolution.

Closing Statement

Here's a series with solid writing and acting, backed up by some fascinating
concepts. That being said, it doesn't quite reach the lofty goals it has set for
itself. Recommended for sci-fi junkies only.

The Verdict

Manny Coto and the crew of the Odyssey are free to go on battling those
sneaky sentients. Showtime is found guilty for axing a good show before it
reached its potential. Court is adjourned.